RV Electricity – Electric residential clothes dryers in RVs

Why am I not getting any heat from my new electric clothes dryer?

Okay, everyone. Here’s a fascinating puzzle I’ve been working on for the last few weeks. I think I understand what’s happening, but if you have more intel on the topic I’m happy to hear about it.

So how exactly does a 240-volt clothes dryer work in an RV with a 50-amp 120/240-volt shore power connection? Is the clothes dryer actually wired for 240 volts or something else? And how could it possibly work with a 30-amp/120-volt shore power plug? Confused? Yes, many RV technicians do seem to be confused about how this works and do improper installations that won’t heat properly. I’ll do my best to demystify the process a bit.

Here are the basics. As you all should know by now, the 50-amp outlet you plug into is sort of a combination 120- and 240-volt connection. That is, just like in your house, it can supply either 120 volts or 240 volts of electricity to your appliances though a variety or outlets and circuit breakers. But unlike your house, an RV can’t always depend on having a full 120/240-volt service available to plug into. Nope, sometimes it’s just 120 volts and nothing more. Take a look at how the power company actually wires up your house (and your campground pedestal). (As usual, you can click on any of my graphics to enlarge them to full size.)

Note that even though there’s a 240-volt winding on the lower half of the transformer, there’s a center-tap wire that divides it in the middle into 120- and 120-volt legs, which I’ve called Hot 1 and Hot 2 in the illustration. That center wire is called the neutral and is typically colored white in the USA. Also note that in addition to various loads of 500, 800, 900 and 1,200 watts powered by 120 volts, there’s a high wattage load at the bottom that’s typically the electric clothes dryer, water heater or oven in your home.

The mistake that many RV technicians and owners make is assuming that your RV is wired the same way as your home. The problem is that few RVs (except for the largest coaches) have any appliances powered by 240 volts. So even if you do have an electric clothes dryer, it’s typically powered by a single pole of 120 volts on a 30-amp breaker and outlet, not the 240-volt 2-pole outlet in your home.

In fact, most RV circuit breaker panels are built so it’s impossible to plug in a 2-pole circuit breaker to make 240-volts of 2-pole power. As you can see, there’s a 50-amp incoming breaker which effectively splits the panel into two separate bus bars, each of which powers the circuit breakers on the left or right side of the panel. So there’s no way a single 2-pole breaker can grab two different legs of incoming power.

What does that mean for our electric dryer? Well, if we simply take a residential 240-volt dryer and hook it across the 120 volts available at the outlet, then at the very least the heating element will be outputting only 25% of the rated wattage. So a dryer with a 3,600-watt heating element at 240 volts will now be creating only 900 watts of heat.

And that’s exactly why a 240-volt residential dryer in your 120-volt RV takes forever to dry your clothes. There’s just not enough wattage to do the job. The reason why the motor and electronics still run is that they’re designed to operate from 120 volts, even in a 240-volt power situation.

Ohm’s Law Alert

So what are we to do? Well, you can, in fact, get a replacement heating element for many residential clothes dryers that will convert them to 120 volts, albeit at slightly reduced wattage. And if the heating element has a center-tap connection there’s a rewiring trick you can do to get 1,800 to 2,400 watts on a 120-volt supply. But that’s a brand- and model-specific rewiring trick which we’ll explore in a few weeks.

In the meantime, you can tell what type of element you have in your dryer by measuring its resistance (with the power off, of course). For a 120-volt element if you multiply 120 x 120 = 14,400 then divide by the rated 2,400 watts you’ll get 6 ohms. But a 240-volt, 3,600-watt element calculates as 240 x 240 = 57,600 divided by the rated 3,600 watts, and you should measure around 16 ohms. In general, a 120-volt, 2,400-watt element will measure around 6 ohms, and a 240-volt, 3,600-watt element will measure around 16 ohms.

Okay, that’s enough of a brain teaser for new. Stay tuned for Part 2 of the dryer rewiring question next time.

Remember, let’s play safe out there….

Mike Sokol is an electrical and professional sound expert with 40+ years in the industry. His excellent bookRV Electrical Safety is available at Amazon.com. For more info on Mike’s qualifications as an electrical expert, click here.

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Alec Ramsey

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The outlet for my dryer in the fifthwheel is a 120 to 250v dryer plug.

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4 months ago

Linda Bryan

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In February I picked up my custom built handicapped equipped fifth wheel. I had ordered and paid $1600 for a combo washer dryer to be installed in it. I was thrilled to see the beautiful machine, that was only listed as “washer dryer” on my contract. After driving several hundred miles we set up in our first r.v. park. That’s where we discovered our w/d didn’t actually dry, it only extracted moisture. I only learned it was an unvented, “European” style machine from the manufacturer of the machine. I called the company that built our rv to complain. Their response to me was for me to drive back to Mesa, AZ and they would replace the machine with a “vented” machine but they would charge us another $800. for labor costs. That cost plus the time, miles, gas cost and probable motel costs made that option out of the question. We still have not resolved the issue.

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9 months ago

Steve Reno

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I have never seen a park that had 240 available at the ped & hope I never do as if I plug in it will blow the crap out of everything I think.
Why are people trying to put household washers & dryers in an RV.
They make RV units for RV’s that run on 115VAC.
!

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We have a 110 volt apartment size dryer that works very well with our apartment size washer. It takes about 45 minutes to wash a load (a little more than half a residential load of laundry) and about 70 minutes to completely dry.

We do laundry for two every couple of days and we full-time.

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9 months ago

Mike Sokol

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My “I Like Mike” donation page should be up and running in a few days. Thanks for your interest and support.

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9 months ago

Mike Flank

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Mike, I am sure that most of the RV Travel readers would be glad to donate. The service that you provide is invaluable to the betterment of the RV experience. Keep up the great work. I for one appreciate it greatly.

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9 months ago

John

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Mike, I’d love to give you a monthly donation like I do to RV Travel. How do I! Your understanding of electricity applied to RV’s is unparalleled.

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